Jason Danieley: A Broadway singing actor who writes now and again.

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Putting it Together…

Bit by bit,
Putting it together…
Piece by Piece-
Only way to make a work of art.
Every moment makes a contribution,
Every little detail plays a part.
Having just a vision’s no solution,
Everything depends on execution:
Putting it together-
That’s what counts!

Tomorrow, Tuesday February 24th 2015 rehearsals begin for the New Broadway Musical THE VISIT.

So many elements over the years are finally coming together where this piece of art can finally be shared with everyone.

THE VISIT is a play written by the Swiss playwright Friederich Dürrenmatt. It is a love story with all the complications that life, sex, betrayal and money can bring. He called it a TragiComedy and Terrence McNally (Ragtime, Kiss of the Spider Woman) along with John Kander & Fred Ebb (Chicago, Cabaret, Kiss of the Spider Woman) have made it into a TragiMusicalComedy. It is starring the theatre legends Chita Rivera (Chicago, …Spider Woman) and Roger Rees (Nicholas Nickleby, A Man of No Importance), Directed by John Doyle (Sweeney Todd, A Catered Affair) and choreographed by Graciela Daniele (Ragtime, Once On This Island).

What a team!

It has been a long, long road to Broadway for this show. It started with the first reading around 1998/99. I know, I was there. I played the role of Karl Schell son to the role that Roger plays. Now all these years later I’m too old for that part and get the juicy role of Schoolmaster Kuhn.

Anyway, I digress… There are and, no doubt will continue to be, article upon article chronicling that long and difficult journey. I ain’t writing about that… exactly.

Needless to say it almost always takes a long time (years and years) to get a musical from the creative teams minds, to paper, to the little brains of us actors and out of our mouths in order to present it in a reading form, sitting at music stands, and workshops (ad nauseam sometimes… over and over) pitching it to men and women with money to make this dream come to fruition. Even with a team as estimable as the one listed above it takes a damn long time. I know! Crazy, right?!?

Then when a producer, or producers, finally takes on the challenge to raise the money to put this dream on it’s feet it behooves them to take the show out of town to make sure all of the elements are just right so you don’t open and close on the same night when you finally do make it to Broadway.

Sets, costumes, orchestrations, lights, sound, stage managers, carpenters, wardrobe (makers & dressers), musicians & copyists, electricians, sound technicians, fly-men/women, front of house (theatre managers, ushers, concessions), stage door men/women, cleaning staff, the theatre owners and their staff, press representatives and their staff, publicity firms and their staff… “etcetera, etcetera, etcetera” (Said in your best Yul Brenner) Then looking back at the “out of town try out” you have this whole list repeated at a slightly smaller scale, usually with a smaller budget to do everything you need to do.

Oy! That’s a lot of people to pull off one show. One show that has spent 16 or 17 years in development. One show that has employed hundreds of people over the years. One show that has had three “out of town” tryouts.

This happens, or a variation thereof, for every single Broadway show you see… or DON’T see. It is a labor of love. We get paid, of course, but it’s always a gamble on how long a show runs, how long you get that pay check. You do it (theatre) because you have to you need to. But that’s a topic for another blog entry.

Tomorrow the creative team, actors, stage managers and rehearsal pianists get together in two mid-town Manhattan studios to bring their years of experience into a room; spilling out their love, sweat and tears to polish, shine and present to the “world” the last collaboration of McNally, Kander & Ebb and the last of the un-produced, on Broadway, shows that John Kander & Fred Ebb wrote.

We do this for all of those who have come before us who have, bit-by-bit, piece-by-piece, made their contribution and played their part in putting it together.